Publication:
PSA change after antibiotic treatment should not affect decisionmaking on performing a prostate biopsy.

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2023-01-31T21:00:00Z

Authors

Authors

Kayalı, Yunus
Balbay, Mevlana Derya
İlktaç, Abdullah
Ersöz, Cevper
Toprak, Hüseyin
Tarım, Kayhan
Eden, Arzu Baygül
Akçay, Muzaffer
Doğan, Bayram

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Metrics

Search on Google Scholar

Abstract

To investigate the effect of antibiotic treatment on PSA when deciding on prostate biopsy.
A total of 206 patients with an elevated PSA level (2.5-30) were included. Mp-MRI could be done on 129 patients. Patients were given ciprofloxacin (500 mg, b.i.d. p.o.) for 4 weeks and PSA measurements were repeated. Systematic prostate biopsy was performed regardless of PSA changes on all patients. Additionally, cognitive biopsies were performed from PI-RADs III, IV, and V lesions.
: Prostate cancer was detected in 36.4% of patients. 53.3% had Gleason score of 3+3, 46.7% had Gleason score ≥ 3+4. PSA values decreased in 56.3% and in 43.7% and remained the same or increased but cancer detection rates were not different: 34.5% vs. 38.9%, respectively (p = 0.514). PSA change in whole group was significant (6.38 ng/mL vs. 5.95 ng/mL, respectively (p = 0.01). No significant PSA decrease was observed in cancer patients (7.1 ng/mL vs. 7.05 ng/mL, p = 0.09), whereas PSA decrease was significant in patients with benign pathology (6.1 ng/mL vs. 5.5 ng/mL, p = 0.01). In patients with PI-RADs IV-V lesions, adenocarcinoma was present in 33.9% and 30.4% with or without PSA decrease, respectively (p = 0.209). Clinically significant cancer was higher in patients with after antibiotherapy PSA values >4 ng/mL regardless of PI-RADs grouping (p = 0.08). Addition of any PSA value to PI-RADs grouping did not have any significant effect on the detection of cancer.
PSA change after antibiotic treatment has no effect in detecting cancer and should not delay performing a biopsy.

Description

Keywords

Antibacterial agents, multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging, prostate cancer, prostate-specific antigen

Citation

Page Views

1

File Downloads

0

Sustainable Development Goals